Recently, I had the opportunity to handle some antique swords owned by fellow member Mark Bruck (Hi Mark, if you're reading this!). The highlight of his collection is a cutlass from the 17th (I think) century which still has its original grip. This was the sweetest weapon I've ever held. I looked at the distal taper on the blade, and it was the most dramatic distal taper on a sword I've ever seen, far more dramatic than most modern replicas. It must have been nearly 1/4" thick at the hilt, but near the point it seemed more like 1/16" or 3/32". I may be exaggerating these measurements, as it's been a while, and I'm only guessing by eyesight, but my point is this: Why the is it that so few replica sword makers don't seem to adequately grasp this concept? The balance on this weapon was phenomenal. We all know that swords were thicker near the hilt and thinner near the point. Why can't replica makers duplicate this? I have yet to handle a replica with a balance and distal taper as good as the cutlass belonging to Mark Bruck.
Now, to be fair, I know that modern sword makers' weapons have a distal taper. But I've never seen one as dramatic before. And it seemed to me that it REALLY affected the balance. The awesome cutlass is of European manufacture. Mark also has an antique cutlass from roughly the same time period that was made in the Carribean. The difference in balance between these two is staggering. The Carribean cutlass is MUCH more blade-heavy, and not near as quick as the European one. I was reminded more of a butcher's cleaver, not a sword. I looked at the Carribean sword more closely, and sure enough, almost no distal taper.
Have modern manufacturers simply not caught on to this fact, or is it some kind of cost concern?
Patrick Hardin

